iterate -base +package

The Iteratee monad provides strict, safe, and functional I/O. In addition to pure Iteratee processors, file IO and combinator functions are provided. See Data.Iteratee for full documentation.
Version 0.8.9.4

Write blog posts in Markdown format, then use BlogLiterately to do syntax highlighting, format ghci sessions, and upload to any blog supporting the metaWeblog API (such as Wordpress): http://codex.wordpress.org/XML-RPC_MetaWeblog_API.
To get started, use the provided executable BlogLiterately; see http://byorgey.wordpress.com/blogliterately/ for complete documentation.
To make further customization possible, the internals of the executable are made available as a library. In particular, it is easy to create your own executable which adds extra custom transformations; see Text.BlogLiterately.Run.
Version 0.7.0.2

This package acts as a bidirectional bridge between two monad transformers: the Data.Iteratee.Base.Iteratee in the iteratee package, and the Control.Monad.Coroutine.Coroutine in the monad-coroutine package.
Version 0.1.1

This package provides chunked XML parsing using iteratees. It is especially suited to implementing XML-based socket protocols, but is useful wherever lazy parsing is needed on production systems where you can't tolerate the problems that come with Haskell's lazy I/O.
The XML is presented as a lazy tree, and is processed by a handler implemented using a monad transformer called XMLT. The resulting monad is suspended whenever it tries to read a part of the tree that hasn't been parsed yet, and continued as soon as it is available. The resulting code looks and functions very much as if you were using lazy I/O, only without the associated problems. Your handlers can have effects, yet they come out in quite a functional style.
Background: Haskell's lazy I/O can be problematic in some applications because it doesn't handle I/O errors properly, and you can't predict when it will clean up its resources, which could result in file handles running out.
Version 0.6